Why over population is a myth

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Wealthy nations do not grow exponentiallyOverpopulation is a myth because the world is not overpopulated, cities are overpopulated, and advanced societies are not well-balanced for long-term growth.

According to the Population Research Institute, the myth of overpopulation is the belief that the Earth’s population will exceed its carrying capacity, leading to economic or social collapse

According to the Foundation for Economic Education, experts believe that the world has the capacity to sustainably feed 40–50 billion people, which is about eight to ten times the current population. 

According to the Cato Institute, the idea that population growth inevitably leads to scarcity and overpopulation is not only false, but it also provides insights into human action and economic progress. 

According to Sustainable Review, the world is not overpopulated, but cities are. They also say that advanced societies are not well-balanced for long-term growth. 

According to Straight Arrow News, the human population is actually declining. The U.S. population is projected to reach a high of nearly 370 million in 2080 before declining to 366 million in 2100. 

According to Sustainable Review, one of the most effective ways to address overpopulation is to provide access to family planning services and education.

Discussions of overpopulation follow a similar line of inquiry as Malthusianism and its Malthusian catastrophe, a hypothetical event where population exceeds agricultural capacity, causing famine or war over resources, resulting in poverty and depopulation.

Malthusianism is a theory that suggests that population growth is exponential, while the growth of food and other resources is linear. This eventually reduces living standards and triggers a population decline. 

Malthusianism also suggests that human populations grow faster than the food supply. This leads to famines, war, or disease that reduce the population. Malthusianism identifies three factors that control human populations that exceed the Earth’s carrying capacity: War, Famine, Disease. 

The concept of carrying capacity originated in 19th-century shipping, referring to the payload capacities of steam ships. By the end of the 19th century, it was used to describe the maximum number of livestock or wild game that grassland and rangeland ecosystems could sustain. 

The “Malthusian view” was popular until recently. However, food production kept pace with the slowly growing global population for the century after Malthus’s death in 1834

Neo-Malthusianism is a theory that suggests that overpopulation and overconsumption could lead to environmental degradation and resource depletion. This could lead to ecological collapse or other hazards. 

Neo-Malthusianism is based on the fear that a large population could lead to a humanitarian and ecological disaster. This belief has sometimes led to support for coercive policies. 

Thomas Malthus was an English economist and demographer who believed that population growth would always outpace the food supply. He also believed that human betterment was impossible without strict limits on reproduction

According to Sustainable Review, the world is not overpopulated, but cities are overpopulated and advanced societies are not well-balanced for long-term growth. 

Some say that the Earth can support more than 9 billion people, and that it’s a matter of allocating resources properly. Others say that the claim that the world will become dangerously overpopulated has never been true. 

According to Vox, the carrying capacity of the Earth is not fixed. Sustainable Review says that one of the most effective ways to address overpopulation is to provide access to family planning services and education. 

According to THRIVE blog, the world’s densest cities are in South Asia and Africa, including Mumbai, Dhaka, Cairo, and Kinshasa

One of the most popular and persistent ideas about the future of humanity is that population growth inevitably makes resources scarcer, eventually leading to a crisis of overpopulation. But this myth is not only false, it’s false in ways that provide deep insights into the nature of human action and economic progress.

overpopulation is false and provides insights into human action and economic progress. The Cato Institute also says that the popular belief that population growth makes resources scarcer is false. 

The Cato Institute also says that overpopulation hysteria is a groundless reason to limit reproduction. The Cato Institute says that unwarranted panic about overpopulation has led to human rights abuses and suffering. 

The Cato Institute says that economic growth is essential to reducing poverty, but only if everyone has the opportunity to participate in that growth

The claim that the world will become dangerously overpopulated has never been true. It was false when first postulated in the 19th century. It was false when The Population Bomb was first published in the 1960s. It is false now. That this theory is still taught in grade schools all over the world even today does not make it any truer. It remains a false theory

The population controllers continue to make their case, however. They still say the world will soon starve, and that we will soon run out of natural resources, and that the planet is running out of room. Anyone can test the theory, however. Next time you are in an airplane flying virtually anywhere in the world, even in the very populous United States, look down from on high and what you will see is a remarkably empty planet straining to be made a garden by more of us.


In 1798, an Anglican minister by the name of Thomas Malthus published the first edition of his An Essay on the Principle of Population where he speculated that, under perfect economic conditions, humans reproduce exponentially while their ability to increase agricultural output increases only linearly at best.

The USCCB says that the theory that the world will eventually die from overpopulation is false. They say that the world produces more food on less land than ever before, and that we will not run out of food, natural resources, or room. 

The Cato Institute says that the myth of overpopulation is false in ways that provide insights into the nature of human action and economic progress. 

Some solutions to overpopulation include: 

  • Improving and promoting family planning 
  • Providing education on the effects of overpopulation on the economy

(Full article source google)

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